The Chipolo One Point and Card Point are available starting at $22.
They’re highly accurate, robust, and integrate well into the Google ecosystem.
However, the One is only splashproof, and the Card version has a non-user-replaceable battery.
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AirTags are one of the things that have set the Apple ecosystem apart from the Android ecosystem. But now that Google has rolled out its Find My Device network, the Android ecosystem is catching up.
Also: How to tell if an AirTag is secretly tracking you – and what to do about it
And spearheading that is Slovenia-based Chipolo, a tech company that’s been in the finder tag market (the company uses the word “finder” rather than “tracker”) for over a decade, and it has now released two tags exclusively for Android users — the One Point<!–> fob for keys and the Card Point–> for wallets and bags.
The One Point is a fob that fits on a keyring or anything else you can think of attaching a fob to — from your pet to your bike. It measures 1.49in/37.9mm and is 0.25in/6.4mm thin, and it is splashproof to IPX5 standard.
Powering the tiny fob is a user-replaceable CR2032 lithium coin cell<!–> that should last about a year. As far as range, the fob is good to about 200ft/60m if you want to activate it to play a sound.
The Card Point is a thin plastic finder that measures 3.35 x 2.11 in (85.1 x 53.6 mm) and is only 0.09 in (2.4mm thick) – about three times a credit card’s thickness.
is priced at $22 for a single tag, while the Chipolo Card Point<!–> is $28 for a single card.